There's a pool of egg white on the stovetop, a sprinkling of icing sugar covering the bench top, Friand mixture splatters pretty much everywhere, chocolate stains on my apron, cheesecake mixture on a shopping bag, a stack of dishes in the sink and my hands are stained raspberry red.
You could say it is a bit of a mess.
But for some reason, I don't seem to mind.
It isn't bothering me that there is a mess there for me to clean up.
In fact, the mess seems almost beautiful.
Perhaps because it seems worth it when I think of the Raspberry Cheesecake Brownies cooling on the bench and the Mini Raspberry Friands due to go into the oven.
And of the friends coming over tonight and how much they are going to enjoy eating the foods I've made 3 hours, 2 trips to the shop and 1 messy kitchen later (and at least 1 load of dishes already done, courtesy of Dad).
And it occurs to me that there have been times when the kitchen has been less messy and I've been more stressed about it. For a second I wonder why.
Then I realize:
those times when a small splatter of egg stressed me out, or a dash of flour has me rushing for the cloth, or the sizzling of water hitting a hot ring has me rubbing my forehead anxiously, have been the times when I've been so focused on the process of cooking, on the process of cleaning that I've lost sight of just what it is I'm cooking, and just why it is I'm cooking it.
When I've forgotten the big picture and been caught up in the minute, that's when I've gotten the most stressed.
And suddenly I realize that I'm not just thinking about the cooking, I'm thinking about all of my life.
When I've forgotten what God has done for me, when I've taken my eyes off of God's promises, when I've overlooked God's glory those are the times when my pain has overwhelmed me. When I've stressed the most. When I've hated myself the most.
Because I've forgotten the big picture and been caught up in the minute.
And the minute only matters if you see God in it.
If you see His Greatness and His Grace.
And they say it's not the destination that matters, but the journey.
But I don't think that's true.
It's the destination that makes the journey worth while.
What does it matter what lessons we learn, what mistakes we make, what things we see, what we experience, if we never arrive anywhere?
If it doesn't actually go towards anything?
And just focusing on the journey, well, it bogs you down and stresses you out and you can forget why you ever started on it and give up, and then never reach the destination.
And you miss out.
You miss out big time.
Because when you journey with God, it's not about the journey. It's about who He makes you, where He's taking you, and who He is.
And contrary to the "it's the journey, not the destination" mentality, Paul urges us to fix our eyes on the prize, to run the race, to fight the good fight and to never give up. And Peter and John, well, they urge us to keep growing, keep moving, because where we're moving too, who we're moving to is worth all the pain, all the agony, all the mess.
It's not the journey that matters, it's the destination. Because the destination gives the journey meaning, and the journey leads to the destination.
And the mess is beautiful not because of any beauty it inherently has, but because the mess is part of something bigger. Something better.
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